The Supreme Court of the U.S.A. has refrained from discussing "the f-word" for thirty years, but due to some celebrities' recent careless use of the word, the Honorable Justices might renew the arguments and attempt to reach agreement as to the degree of the word's indecency and whether or not the Mass Media companies should be fined for allowing the word to be broadcast at certain times of day. The little boys that I grew up with used the word "fuck" in all of its various senses and meanings, and everyone knew that it was a word whose utterance was taboo in the presence of adults. Meanwhile, recent informal surveys show that virtually all adults use the word and all agree that its utterance is taboo in the presence of children.

Can any of our resident authorities on child development tell us the exact nature of the damage that might be done to children if they were to hear the word used freely by adults ?

I don't know if it damages the children but (in this one specific case) I think it damages the word. If people go around using "fuck" all the time like any other adjective it loses its shock value and then we'll be forced to find a replacement for it. I can think of a noun that still has considerable shock value but I can't think of an adjective we could use.

I think it's more a matter of social acceptability or manners. I've taught my son that certain words are inappropriate to use in polite conversation, just as he knows that he should keep his lips closed when chewing food, and that he should hold the door open for the person walking into a building behind him. My own father taught me that using cuss words demonstrates a lack of both creativity and intelligence (he is pretty conservative about a lot of things!), and therefore forbade us to talk that way.

It's tricky, raising kids, to get across that fine balance that it's not appropriate to talk about private parts or sex, but that those things are bad or "dirty" in and of themselves.

*******"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama

Meanwhile, recent informal surveys show that virtually all adults use the word and all agree that its utterance is taboo in the presence of children.

Virtually all? I may have conservative colleagues, but there are a whole lot people I know who would never use this word, at least that's the impression they give.

My mother absolutely hated sewing, and got very frustrated at it. But she sewed a lot. When everything went wrong (and if you've ever sewn, it can be amazingly irritating!), she'd sometimes blurt that word out. One day, at about age 8, I said, "Mother, what does fuck mean?" She quickly said that it was a very naughty word, and I had better never say it. I don't think she ever said it again.

news release:With the French government taking an official position of disagreement with the Bush Administration, one local French family spoke out in favor of their home government’s position. Interviewed as part of a local newspaper poll, they were asked if they agreed with the Middle East policy position of French President Jacques Chirac. “Mebst!” shouted the father of the family, who wanted to be identified only as “Beldar”. “Mebst! We have no hostile intentions toward your puny planet, and deny that we are scouting for a primary invasion force.”

When the reporter repeated the question, suggesting that perhaps the Frenchman had either misunderstood the question, or the publicly stated French position, the family’s mother (identified as “Primat”) spoke up. “What my spousal unit means to say is that we fully support our country’s policies. By the many moons of Meepzoar, we promise to rigidly enforce the ruthless will of the great Leaders of Remulak, er, I mean France.”

When I was teaching elementary school ( in a small, private Christian school) about 18 years ago, I used to ban the children from saying that things "sucked". Because of what the real meaning of that phrase implies, I felt it was inappropriate in polite society.

Boy - don't I sound snooty? It's the meaning of the phrases, though, and the impropriety of hearing such meanings come out of the mouths of young people - under the age of puberty, even. Also, I felt that the school setting should be - well - preparing students for the professional world, and it would be inappropriate in most professional places to speak in such a way. Don't you think?

*******"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama

In the world-languages-for-tots department... I and some of my small charges were reviewing a Spanish-audio-track version of a "Dora la Exploradora" DVD. When foiled, Swiper the Fox ("Zorro") cries "¡Ah, r-r-rayos!"-- a very mild Mexican epithet, barely equal to 'oh, darn.' I foolishly asked the kids what they thought it meant, and a darling 3-yr-old immigrant from India smiled sweetly & said, "it means oh fuck."

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